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Research English At Durham

46 Episodes

20 minutes | Dec 11, 2020
Space, choreography and royal iconography at the English court
For diplomats coming to the court of Charles I, it was more than a case  of knocking at the door and being shown in. In this Late Summer Lectures  podcast, Kimberley Foy uses the experience of visiting ambassadors to  show how attending the court of Charles I involved a carefully  choreographed set of moves, through particular spaces. For more information and an accessible transcript, visit our blog.
19 minutes | Nov 27, 2020
Rousing the vox populi in James Shirley’s The Politician
In this podcast from our Late Summer Lectures series, Kathleen Foy from  Durham University explains how James Shirley’s 1639 tragedy The Politician reflected the court and politics of Charles I. For more information and an accessible transcript, visit our blog.
24 minutes | Nov 20, 2020
Birds and Embodiment in Shelley and Keats
In this podcast from our Late Summer Lectures series, Dr Amanda Blake  Davis of the University of Sheffield takes us on a flight through birds  and embodiment in the poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats. For more information, and an accessible transcript, visit: https://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/?p=30434
30 minutes | Nov 13, 2020
The Autobiographical Pursuit of Happiness in Eighteenth-Century Literature
In this podcast from our Late Summer Lectures series, Alex Hobday  (University of Cambridge) examines how eighteenth-century culture sought to answer that eternal question: what is happiness, and how can we achieve it? For more information, and an accessible transcript, visit: https://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/?p=30441
45 minutes | Jun 19, 2020
In Conversation with Jane Smiley
In a wide-ranging interview, Pulitzer-prize-winning novelist Jane Smiley explains  how literary characters take on a life of their own, reflects on the  representation of the body in literature, and examines her own status as  a female novelist emerging in the 1970s. This conversation between Dr Jennifer Terry and Jane Smiley was recorded at the Literary Dolls conference in 2014. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
49 minutes | Jun 12, 2020
An Evening with T.S. Eliot
The Centre for Poetry and Poetics held an evening to celebrate the poetry and influence of T.S. Eliot.  Dr Gareth Reeves and Professor Jason Harding, two scholars who specialise in Eliot’s life and works, read from Eliot's own poetry and that of later poets such as Donald Davie and Hart Crane who were inspired by him. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
11 minutes | Jun 5, 2020
Antler
John Clegg’s first collection, Antler,  features prehistoric landscapes, folk tale and myth. John’s  reading includes a history of a city in four stanzas, and the story of  an “ice road trucker.” John Clegg’s poetry is published by and copyright  of Salt Publishing. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
17 minutes | May 29, 2020
To Hell with Paradise
Gareth Reeves’ third collection, To Hell With Paradise: New and Selected Poems,  has just been published by Carcanet. In this reading from the  collection, Gareth adopts a range of intriguing perspectives and voices,  including that of a cash machine looking at a man trying to withdraw  his money, and Dimitri Shostakovich thinking about bird droppings.  Gareth Reeves’s collection is published by and copyright of Carcanet. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
11 minutes | May 22, 2020
The Challenges of Researching and Writing Poetry
Two of the Department’s published poets, Gareth Reeves and his PhD student John Clegg, explore how their writing of poetry relates to  their research.  They explain how they began writing poetry rather than writing about poetry, and discuss how writing poetry gives them unique insights into  the forms and methods employed in the work of other poets. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
64 minutes | May 15, 2020
The Poetry of W.B. Yeats
A century and a half since his birth, the Irish poet W.B. Yeats is one  of the best-loved in the English language, known for his lyric poems  such as ‘The Lake Isle of Innishfree’ or for romantic poems like ‘He  Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven.’ Throughout his literary career,  though, Yeats wrote in a range of styles and on diverse subjects. His  poems reflect his Irish nationalism, reinvent traditional genres, draw  inspiration from Irish myth and legend, and push into innovative  symbolism. Stephen Regan and Michael O’Neill take us on a journey  through the varied landscape of Yeats’s verse. Find out more at READ: Research English At Durham.
67 minutes | May 8, 2020
Celebrating the Brontës
Celebrate the literature and legacy of the Brontë sisters in this  podcast, recorded around the bicentenary of Charlotte Brontë’s birth,  which features readings from and commentaries on their ground-breaking,  powerful, and influential novels and poems. Works featured include Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre and Villette alongside the poetry and prose of her sisters, Emily and Anne Brontë.  The readings also reflect the creative reimaginings inspired by the  Brontës’ fiction in the literature of later women writers, such as  Sylvia Plath and Jean Rhys. The podcast mentions a short art film by Jade Monserrat, called Peat Bog, which reinvokes the spirit of the moors; a short version can be viewed below. The readers are Professor Michael O’Neill, Dr Jennifer Terry, and Dr Sarah Wootton.
22 minutes | May 1, 2020
Becoming Sea: A Blurred Lyric of the Ocean
We humans are creatures of the  land, who usually observe the sea from above its surface. Beneath the  surface, though, the sea looks, sounds and feels like a distinct and  unique environment.  The poet Sarah Hymas invites us beneath the waves,  to perceive the sea and the interrelationship between sea and land,  between it and us, in deep and immersive ways. Find out more at https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-6Y1
40 minutes | Apr 17, 2020
Albion: The Brut Chronicle
Albion. Today that word conjures impressions of a lost, utopian version  of Britain – but the story of Albion as it was originally told in the  middle ages is anything but beautiful. According to the early Brut  chronicle, Albion was first discovered by a group of sisters who then  propagated with the wandering devils they found there, spawning a race  of giants. This was the strange land then conquered by Brutus, who gives  his name to modern Britain.  Madeleine Smart of the University of  Liverpool continues the story in this podcast, which was recorded during  the series Late Summer Lectures organised by the Department of English Studies at Durham University.  Find out more at https://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/2017/09/05/new-podcast-albion-change-rebirth-and-stagnancy-in-the-middle-english-prose-brut-chronicle
36 minutes | Apr 10, 2020
Alfred the Great Through History
A king sits by the fire in a peasant’s cottage, brooding on the problems  of his kingdom. Suddenly the smell of burning fills the air. The cakes  left there by his host have been ruined. The king, of course, is Alfred  the Great. But this apocryphal story is just one of many not entirely  true tales that have surrounded this Anglo Saxon monarch through the  ages. David Barrow of the University of York suggests that these stories  tell us less about the king himself, and more about the ideas and  constructions of Englishness in the societies that have told them.  This  podcast was recorded during the series Late Summer Lectures in 2017,  organised by the Department of English Studies at Durham University.   Find out more at http://wp.me/p2iX9Z-6Mh
40 minutes | Apr 3, 2020
Tics in the Theatre: The 'Quiet Audience' and the Neurodivergent Spectator
Do you get annoyed when people  rustle their crisp packets or check their mobile phones in the theatre?  If so you’re probably not alone – but you might be surprised to learn  that the convention that audiences should be quiet is a relatively new  one. It's also a norm that may exclude spectators who can't help but  fidget and make noise. Hannah Simpson (University of Oxford) invites us  to think carefully about how the etiquette of the theatre might be made  more inclusive, with benefits for everyone. Find out more about this podcast at http://wp.me/p2iX9Z-6Nn
23 minutes | Mar 27, 2020
Eugenics in Utopian Literature
The idea of genetic engineering  may conjure visions of futuristic horror, such as mutant human beings  with peculiar powers. But some novels and stories, particularly within  utopian literature, imagine more positive trends in human development,  whether driven by science or natural evolution over time. In this  podcast, Sarah Lohmann considers the complexity of approaches to  evolution and eugenics in utopian fiction, and suggests that the genre  itself has evolved in its depiction of these issues over time. Find out more at http://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/podcasts
36 minutes | Mar 13, 2020
When Masters Became Tragic Heroes
In 1592 the face of theatre  changed forever. From the death of Julius Caesar and its wide political  ramifications, to the love between Antony and Cleopatra played out on an  epic scale, tragic drama had traditionally been associated with the  lives of noble characters drawn from a ruling elite. But the anonymous  play The Tragedy of Master Arden of Faversham enabled playwrights to  conceive of the stage as the setting for more intimate, family dramas.  Iman Sheeha, of the University of Warwick, treads the boards of the new  domestic tragedies around the turn of the sixteenth century. This  talk was recorded as part of the series Late Summer Lectures in 2017,  organised by the Department of English Studies at Durham University. Visit http://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/podcasts   to find out more.
21 minutes | Mar 6, 2020
Fiction and the Victorian Vivisector
The idea of vivisection –  performing surgical experiments on live animals in the name of science –  makes many people squeamish. Not surprisingly, the ethics of animal  experimentation were hotly debated in the Victorian period too. Asha  Hornsby (University College London) shows how novelists of the time  sought to understand the mentality of the vivisectionist, who needed to  maintain uncannily cool dispassion as he prodded and dismembered the  furry creature before him. Find out more at http://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com/podcasts
23 minutes | Feb 21, 2020
(S)he’s just not that into you: Resisting Love in Medieval Romance Literature
The word ‘romance’ conjures images  of men and women meeting one another and falling helplessly in love.  But if we trace the literature of ‘romance’ back to its roots in the  medieval period, we encounter many stories where chivalric knights and  ladies refuse or fail to conform to convention. Hannah Piercy takes us  on a tour through some of this historic writing of the heart – though  she starts with an example that is much closer to home. For more information visit https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7bP
22 minutes | Feb 14, 2020
Registers of petition in the holograph manuscripts of Thomas Hoccleve
Durham University’s Palace Green  Library is home to many medieval manuscripts, but among the most  precious is one of just three surviving collections of poetry written by  the hand of one Thomas Hoccleve – fourteenth-century civil servant,  letter writer, and poet. Laurie Atkinson puts some of Hoccleve’s  literary output under the reading lamp, as he argues that this  disremembered figure deserves to seen in his own right rather than  hidden in the shadow of his immediate poetic predecessor, Geoffrey  Chaucer. Find out more at https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7bA
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